Publisher: Prentice Hall, 1993, 370 pages
ISBN: 0-13-092941-7
Keywords: Networks
This last book of the Marshall Rose trilogy takes us back to his original point of entry into the Internet community — back to his roots, so to speak. Those early days in 1981 and 1982 are deeply engraved in my memory, as I played the role of pied piper with ARPANET mail to lure Marshall into the technology and politics of internetworking, and then together we the drew the Department of Information and Computer Science at the University of California at Irvine into the great world of academic networking. First with an early CSnet dialup "phonenet" connection for network mail, and then with a home-grown split IP gateway research project. The rest is history.
Little did you all know what was being hatched for the Internet community, for the OSI movement, for Internet network management, for OSI directory service, and for computer network mail. I should admit that we did not really see it all coming, but I cannot say that we were blind to the directions that were taken. All along, it was clear that "the game was afoot", and that Marshall was going to play a major role in shaping the future of global networking.
So here we are, with Marshall telling us all about Internet mail, and between the lines educating is about networking issues in general, and explaining many general principles of how things should (and should not) be done in networks.
I am sure you will find The Internet Message both educational and entertaining. This whole networking business is much too deadly serious to be presented without some delicious humor. You will find it packaged as soapboxes, which reminds me of yet another interesting story…
A good primer on SMTP and related technologies.
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